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NatWest faces AGM showdown over ‘climate backtracking’

about 14 hours ago
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NatWest is at risk of an embarrassing showdown at its shareholder meeting this week as investors and scientists call for an urgent reversal of what they describe as “climate backtracking”.Campaigners including ShareAction are calling for protest votes against the bank’s chair, Rick Haythornthwaite, at its annual meeting in Edinburgh on Tuesday.The call is part of efforts to hold the board to account after NatWest watered down restrictions on lending to the oil and gas sector and dropped some decarbonisation targets “without robust explanation”, according to the campaigners.Investors including the Church of England have already thrown their weight behind the campaign, saying they will vote against the reappointment of board members.ShareAction will present letters at the AGM, including a statement signed by investors with $1.

4tn in assets,Signatories include the Church of England Pensions Board, Rathbones Investment Management, EdenTree Investment Management, Nest, and the Greater Manchester Pension Fund,The statement calls for the bank to meet investors within the next three months to discuss its direction on climate strategy,ShareAction will also deliver a letter signed by 70 climate scientists and experts calling on NatWest to “show leadership and reverse the backtracking on climate commitments”,Recent changes to the bank’s climate policy have included dropping a commitment not to lend to any oil and gas companies that either lacked a credible transition plan or failed to report their overall carbon emissions.

The bank has removed a commitment not to finance oil and gas exploration and production companies where most of their assets are outside the UK.It has abandoned targets covering aluminium, cement, iron and steel.“NatWest has undermined public trust and created a clear path for continued financing of a global fossil fuel economy,” the letter signed by climate experts will say.Jeanne Martin, the head of the banking programme at ShareAction, said: “NatWest spent years presenting itself as a climate leader, but quietly rolling back fossil fuel restrictions shows the board is heading in the wrong direction.This kind of backtracking has real consequences, fuelling a climate crisis that is already damaging homes, health and livelihoods, and creating long-term risks for the economy.

”Martin said that at the AGM the board would hear from “concerned investors as well leading climate scientists, underlining why retreating from climate commitments is both dangerous and short‑sighted”.A NatWest group spokesperson said the bank had retained interim targets to at least half its climate impact compared with 2019 while it worked towards longer-term ambitions of net zero emissions from its financing by 2050.“We have refined our approach to ensure it reflects the evolving policy environment, the complex and diverse needs of the transition, and the areas where we can deliver the greatest impact for customers,” a statement said.“Overall, our updated policies are designed to provide clearer, more practical support while keeping our approach to climate clear and accountable.We will continue to engage constructively with stakeholders as we make progress on our commitments.

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politicsSee all
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Dozens of MPs oppose Streeting’s new power to say what NHS pays for drugs

Dozens of MPs are opposing Wes Streeting’s decision to award himself power to dictate what the NHS pays for drugs amid growing concern the move may be illegal.Thirty-one MPs have signed a House of Commons motion voicing their disapproval of the health secretary being handed the power to override the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence’s (Nice) judgment on how much the NHS should spend on individual medicines.They fear that the change is a “power grab” that undermines the role Nice has played since its creation in 1999 as the arbiter of which medicines constitute value for money for the NHS to buy – and thus which patients can receive – in England and Wales. Nice is widely viewed internationally as a model of how to protect against drug companies charging excessive prices.Labour, Green, Liberal Democrat, Independent, Scottish Nationalist and Plaid Cymru MPs have backed a “prayer”, tabled by the Labour ex-shadow chancellor John McDonnell

about 19 hours ago
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Key figure in Mandelson vetting scandal will not give evidence before MPs

A key figure in the row over Peter Mandelson’s appointment as UK ambassador to Washington will not appear before a parliamentary committee of MPs to give evidence.Emily Thornberry had requested that Ian Collard speak to the foreign affairs committee (FAC) on Tuesday, but confirmed on Saturday that he would submit written answers instead.The committee has already heard from Olly Robbins, the Foreign Office’s top civil servant who was forced out of his post last week after the decision to fail Mandelson during his security vetting was overruled by his department, and the Cabinet Office permanent secretary, Cat Little. Keir Starmer’s former chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, is due to appear on Tuesday.Collard, who has given evidence to the select committee previously, is a former ambassador to Lebanon and Panama and was appointed the Foreign Office’s chief property and security officer in March 2023

1 day ago
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Security vetting stepped up after MP is given bodyguard with far-right links

The security company that provides bodyguards for MPs has tightened its vetting processes after it sent a bodyguard with far-right links to protect a politician who was under threat from extremists.Mitie, which has a £31m contract for the work, is updating its CPO (Close Protection Operative) vetting processes to include regular social media checks. There will also be random checks on the social media activity of those already taken on.Concerns about the threat to MPs from extremists – including Islamists and the far right – have risen, with elected representatives facing a level of threat not seen since the campaign mounted by Irish republican terrorists in the 1980s and 70s.Mitie’s contract followed the assassination of the Conservative MP David Amess by an Islamist terrorist in 2021

1 day ago
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Partygate v Mandelson: Keir Starmer faces attack from his own playbook

The lexicon of a British parliamentary scandal is arcane.As Keir Starmer fights to remain prime minister, he has had to respond to a “humble address”, had his judgment picked over during an “emergency opposition day debate” and now faces the ignominy of a “privilege motion”.Close observers of UK politics will, however, recognise these terms as familiar: they are all parliamentary tools used by Labour in opposition as they tried to hold the Conservatives accountable at various points – not least during the Partygate affair that helped bring down Boris Johnson.At first sight, the two controversies are very different.Johnson was ousted in the wake of allegations that he had attended parties in Downing Street during a pandemic lockdown he presided over

1 day ago
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Unlucky chancellor? Iran shock hits Reeves just as UK seemed to turn corner

Donald Trump’s war on Iran is “folly”; shadow chancellor Mel Stride should be “lined up for the sack”; and the Liberal Democrat Daisy Cooper’s plan for managing fuel shortages is “fundamentally economically illiterate”.Rachel Reeves has always relished a political fight, but in recent days she has been swinging at her opponents with what looks very much like enjoyment.Her team say the chancellor’s righteous anger is calculated. The consequences of the conflict may still be being felt in many months and she wants to hammer home two claims: that “we did not start this war and we did not join this war”, as Reeves told MPs this week; and that before the bombs started falling, the UK economy was on the up.“We have got to win the argument that the economy was turning the corner before the war and there was momentum behind it

1 day ago
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‘Nigel is mad to accept his money’: who is Christopher Harborne, the mystery billionaire bankrolling Reform?

A crypto tycoon is giving record-breaking amounts to Farage’s party. But little is known about his motivesShortly before Christmas 2022, Chakrit Sakunkrit, owner of the Kamalaya Wellness Sanctuary on the Thai island of Koh Samui, invited 200 guests to spend a few days celebrating his 60th birthday. One sultry afternoon, Sakunkrit and a small group gathered around a table near the shore, surrounded by the burgundy foliage of Good Luck plants. To his right, dressed down in a polo shirt, sat Nigel Farage.Since Brexit marked the achievement of his life’s work three years earlier, Farage had fizzled

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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From Mother Mary to Foo Fighters: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

2 days ago
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The play’s the thing – but everyone has their own favourite | Letters

2 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: ‘A delicate snowflake with the thinnest fat skin of any human being ever’

2 days ago
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‘It’s iconic worldwide – it’s special to skateboard there’: the South Bank skatepark turns 50

3 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Kash Patel: ‘He has resting “run for your lives” face’

3 days ago
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Post your questions for Melanie C

4 days ago